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Santa Ana College (SAC) alumna
Daria Estrada-Smith has taken her education straight to the top
and has obtained her Ph.D. in Human Genetics from the University
of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Her educational expedition
took longer than expected due to raising a family and other
external factors, but she proves it can be done and is an
inspiration to other returning students.
Determination, patience, self-motivation, and support from
others are key for students in general. For returning students,
however, these motivating factors are crucial.
“It wasn’t easy watching friends move on and transfer while I
stayed behind to raise four children,” expressed Daria.
“However, in retrospect, my lengthy stay at SAC allowed me to
develop the perseverance and self-confidence that I needed to
get through my doctoral studies.”
Before earning her associate degrees in biology and in
liberal arts at SAC, Daria struggled to find her career path.
She began her educational journey in the nursing program and
ended up migrating through several majors trying to figure out
her niche. Aware that she had gained a solid foundation and
interest in science and math, she began tutoring biology and
math classes at the college. At last, she enrolled in her very
first human genetics course and that was when she decided to
enter the biomedical research field.
Daria felt that studying human genetics was what she wanted
to do because there was enough math and science to hold her
attention, plus she was intrigued by the ethical implications
essential to determining what makes humans human at the
molecular level. Daria appreciates working on problems related
to diabetes, obesity and atherosclerosis, to which the answers
will someday make a difference for her family and community.
In regard to preparation for her doctoral defense, she felt
it was her chance to recap all of her knowledge throughout her
education. It was her one chance to pull it all together for
everyone to review and criticize.
“The process is invigorating and even a little bit sad,
because for all the work that you’ve done there is that much
more left undone,” voiced Daria stressing what a humbling
experience it had been.
She hopes to do her post-doctoral training in the near future at
the National Institutes of Health and has the long-term goal of
working somewhere regarding medical genetics, which according to
Daria is a nice cross between genetic counseling and research.
“But if it takes a village to raise a child… then it took two
biology departments, three academic mentors, one tutoring
program, four children, an extraordinarily supportive husband,
and two generous parents to produce one Ph.D.,” exclaimed Daria
who prevailed in the demands of family, work, school, and
marriage.
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